2 Air Force planes to help with Gulf of Mexico oil spill

(U.S. Air Force)Two U.S. Air Force C-130 cargo planes like the one pictured will spray chemicals to help break up the Gulf Coast oil spill, Pentagon officials said on Friday, April 30, 2010.

WASHINGTON -- Two Air Force planes will spray chemicals to help break up the Gulf Coast oil spill, Pentagon officials said today as they considered what more the military could do to assist.

The two C-130 Hercules cargo planes were staging for their flights at Lake Charles, La., after getting their orders Friday, Pentagon press secretary Geoff Morrell said. The planes were sent from the Youngstown Air Reserve Station in Ohio on Thursday.

Defense Secretary Robert Gates late Friday mobilized the Louisiana National Guard to help communities respond to the oil spill. Morrell said the government will require BP to pay for the costs of deployment.

To see updated projection maps related to the oil spill in the Gulf, visit the Deepwater Horizon Response Web site established by government officials.

How to help: Volunteers eager to help cope with the spill and lessen its impact on the Gulf Coast environment and economy.

Asked if he was confident the military was doing all it could to help, Morrell said: "We are confident that we are providing what has been asked of us and what is required of us at this point."

But he noted the situation continued to evolve as oil seeped into Louisiana's wetlands and threatened to push deeper inland.

"This is a dynamic, changing situation," Morrell said, and the military will help as needed.

The Navy said Thursday that it was sending booms, skimmers and contractors to of its bases in Mississippi and Florida that it is opening as staging areas.

The help was provided under existing agreements the two services have with the Coast Guard for such efforts. U.S. Northern Command has officers on the coast working with the Department of Homeland Security to figure out what more may be needed, Morrell said.